Title: Initial Assessment and Management of Trauma
1Initial Assessment and Management of Trauma
- EMS Professions
- Temple College
2Introduction
- Golden Hour
- Time to reach operating room(or other definitive
treatment) - NOT time for transport to ED
- NOT time in Emergency Department
3Introduction
- EMS does NOT have a Golden Hour
- EMS has a Platinum Ten Minutes
4Introduction
- Patients in their Golden Hour must
- Be recognized quickly
- Have only immediate life threats managed
- Be transported to an APPROPRIATE facility
5Introduction
- Survival depends on assessment skills
- Good assessment results from
- An organized approach
- Clearly defined priorities
- Understanding available resources
6Size-Up
- Begins with Dispatch info
- Safety
- Scene
- Situation
- Report your size-up
- Additional support or resources
- Critical vs non-critical patient
7Size-Up on Approach
- Safety, Scene, Situation
- How does the scene look?
- Hazards?
- How many patients? Where are they?
- What do the mechanism kinematics suggest?
- Special Needs/Resources?
- Immediate actions required?
- Report your size-up
8Size-Up on Approach
- What is your radio size-up of this incident?
9Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Find and correct life threats
- Most obvious or dramatic injury usually is NOT
what is killing the patient! - If life-threat is present, CORRECT IT!
- If it cant be corrected
- Support oxygenation, ventilation, perfusion
- TRANSPORT!!
- SICK or NOT SICK?
10Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- With critical trauma you may never get beyond the
primary survey
11Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Airway with C-Spine Control
- You dont need a C-collar yet
- Return head to neutral position
- Stabilize without traction
- Axially unload spine
12Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Airway with C-Spine Control
- Noisy breathing is obstructed breathing
- But all obstructed breathing is not noisy
- Manpower intensive task
13Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Airway with C-Spine Control
- Anticipate airway problems with
- Decreased level of consciousness
- Head trauma
- Facial trauma
- Neck trauma
- Upper thorax trauma
- Severe Burns to any of these areas
- Open, Clear, Maintain
14Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Breathing
- Is oxygen getting to the blood?
- Is air moving?
- Is it moving adequately?
- Is it moving at an adequate rate?
15Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Breathing
- Look
- Listen
- Feel
16Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Breathing
- Oxygenate immediately if
- Decreased level of consciousness
- Shock
- Severe hemorrhage
- Chest pain
- Chest trauma
- Dyspnea
- Respiratory distress
- Multi-system trauma
17Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Breathing
- If you think about giving oxygen, GIVE IT!!
18Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Breathing
- Consider assisted ventilations if
- Respirations lt12
- Respirations gt24
- Tidal volume decreased
- Respiratory effort increased
19Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Breathing
- If you cant tell if ventilations are adequate,
they arent!!
20Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Breathing
- If ventilations or respiration are compromised in
the trauma patient, expose, palpate, auscultate
the chest.
21Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Circulation
- Is the heart beating?
- Is there serious external bleeding?
- Is the patient perfusing?
- How do we know?
22Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Circulation
- Does patient have radial pulse?
- Absent radial systolic BP lt 80
- Does patient have carotid pulse?
- Absent carotid systolic BP lt 60
23Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Circulation
- No carotid pulse?
- Extricate
- CPR
- MAST
- Run!!!!
- Survival rate from cardiac arrest secondary to
trauma is very low
24Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Circulation
- Serious external bleeding?
- Direct pressure (hand, bandage, MAST)
- Tourniquet as last resort
- All bleeding stops eventually!
25Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Circulation
- Is patient perfusing?
- Cool, pale, moist skin shock UPO
- Capillary refill gt 2 sec shock UPO
- Restlessness, anxiety, combativeness shock UPO
- If ? internal hemorrhage, QUICKLY expose, palpate
abdomen, pelvis, thighs
26Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Disability (CNS Function)
- Level of consciousness Best brain perfusion
sign - Use AVPU initially
- Check pupils
- The eyes are the window of the CNS
27Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Disability (CNS Function)
- Decreased LOC
- Brain injury
- Hypoxia
- Hypoglycemia
- Shock
- NEVER think drugs, alcohol, or personality first
28Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- Expose and Examine
- You cant treat what you dont find!
- If you dont look, you wont see!
- Remove ALL clothing from critical patients ASAP
- Avoid delaying resuscitation while disrobing
patient - Cover patient with blanket when finished
29Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- A blood pressure or an exact respiratory or pulse
rate is NOT necessary to tell that your patient
is critical !!!!!
30Initial Assessment (Primary Survey)
- If the patient looks sick, hes sick!!!
31Primary Resuscitation
- Treat as you go!
- Aggressively correct hypoxia and hypovolemia.
32Primary Resuscitation
- Immobilize C-spine (manual rigid collar)
- Keep airway open
- Oxygenate
- Rapidly extricate to long board (SMR)
- Begin assisted ventilation with BVM
- Expose Protect from exposure
- Apply and consider inflation of PASG
- Consider intubation
- Transport
- Establish IVs enroute
- Reassess and early notification enroute
33Primary Resuscitation
- Never delay transport of a critical patient to
start an IV!!!
34Primary Resuscitation
- Minimum Time On Scene
- Maximum Treatment In Route
- Have a PLAN!
35Secondary Survey(Detailed/Rapid Trauma)
- History and Physical Exam
- You WILL get here with MOST trauma patients
- Perform ONLY after primary survey is completed
and life threats corrected - Do NOT hold critical patients in field for
secondary survey
36Secondary Survey(Detailed/Rapid Trauma)
- Physical Exam
- Stepwise, organized
- Every patient, same way, every time
- Superior to inferior proximal to distal
- Look--Listen--Feel
37Secondary Survey(Detailed/Rapid Trauma)
- Physical Exam
- Use your stethoscope
- Listen to patients chest
- Most frequently missed areas
- Back
- Mouth
- Neuro exam
38Secondary Survey(Detailed/Rapid Trauma)
- Physical Exam
- Assessment of extremities MUST include
- Pulses
- Skin color
- Skin temperature
- Capillary refill
- Motor function
- Sensory function
39Secondary Survey(Detailed/Rapid Trauma)
- History
- Chief complaint
- What the PATIENT says problem is
- Not necessarily what you see
40Secondary Survey(Detailed/Rapid Trauma)
- History
- Ample history
- A Allergies
- M Medications
- P Past medical history
- L Last oral intake
- E Events leading up to incident
41Definitive Field Care
- Performed ONLY on stable patients
42Definitive Field Care
- Packaging
- Bandaging
- Splinting
- If patient critical, all fractures stabilized
simultaneously by securing patient to board
43Definitive Field Care
- Transport
- Stable patients can receive attention for
individual injuries before transport - Reassess carefully for hidden problems
- If patient becomes unstable at any time,
TRANSPORT - Closest APPROPRIATE facility
44Definitive Field Care
- Communication
- Radio report
- Brief
- Concise
- No more than 90 seconds air time
- Written run report
- If it isnt documented, it wasnt done
45Definitive Field Care
- Reevaluation en route
- Ventilation and perfusion status
- Vital signs every five minutes
- Continued management of identified problems
- Continued reassessment for unidentified problems